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Cooya was was designed by Linton Hope, a gold medallist yachtsman in the 1900 Paris Summer Olympics. She was built in 1914 by Aldous Ltd in Brightlingsea, Essex,England as a topsail gaff yawl. She is planked with Burma Teak on grown English Oak, and copper sheathed below the waterline. Cooya was first registered as a British Ship, No 137336, on June 23, 1914, since when she has had seventeen owners. Her first owner was Andrew McIlwraith, a Scot born in Ayr, who, with Malcolm McEacharn, founded a London-based shipping and mercantile firm, McIlwraith, McEacharn & Co (now ASP Ship Management), trading with Australia. They built up a fleet of ten ships sailing under the name of the Scottish Line to Australia (Victoria and Queensland). In 1880, he pioneered the shipping of frozen meat and in 1887 opened a branch of his company in Melbourne, Australia. He made the last of his many trips to Australia in 1912, after his successful reorganisation of the Tokyo tramways, and retired to Salcombe in Devonshire, England in 1913 at the age of 69. Cooya was launched the next year. Interestingly, a four year old racehorse named Cooya (see pedigree listing) won the Victoria Racing Club Stakes in 1892 at Flemington Racecourse, Melbourne. Another horse called Cooya is listed in 1906, out of 'Coo-ee' (1899) by 'The Victory'. Perhaps these were owned by Andrew McIlwraith or members of his family who lived in Melbourne. We have not yet discovered why the first owner named the boat Cooya. Perhaps after one of these horses? Certainly, the word has Australian aboriginal origins. However there are many aboriginal languages in different parts of the country and we have not been able to establish the meaning the word will have had to the British who were in Melbourne at the turn of the century. The word 'Coo-ee' is a call, or greeting, while the word 'Kooya' is listed in this website , meaning Fish. A number of place names in Australia include the word Cooya, the best known of which is the rapidly expanding resort town, Cooya Beach, at Port Douglas in North Queensland. In 1919 Andrew McIlwraith sold Cooya to Alfred Henry John Hamilton, R.N., of Dibden Manor, Hampshire. Her third owner (1921-1926) was Captain Thomas Joseph Mellonie, of Ipswich, Suffolk, who was a merchant seaman and a friend of the legendary Thomas Lipton. His son, Captain John Mellonie, a P&O Commodore, first met his wife, Anne, on board Cooya the day she first arrived as a visitor from Australia. Anne had been invited to sail with the Mellonie family by John's sister, Margo. John Mellonie wanted to buy her back in 1945, but couldn't afford to. The first two photographs, taken during this time, when Cooya was about 10 years old, were provided by Thomas Mellonie's great, great grandson, Vaughan McGillivery, who lives in Geelong, Australia and is passionate about wooden boats: he was Boating Industry Association of Victoria 2006 Apprentice of the Year - 2006. After one year with her next owner, David Christian Wardlaw, Cooya was bought by Tom Hamilton Cockburn-Mercer (1927-33), an Army Officer who came from Jersey although he did spend time stationed in other areas, including Ireland, and Sussex where she may have been berthed for a while. His daughter (born 1921) always told wonderful stories about the times the family spent on her, both racing and cruising (often up the West Coast of Scotland (Tom always used to say that a good test of a sailor was to go through the Sound of Sleat under sail!). Apparently, the family employed a skipper (known as 'Skipper John') and a deck-hand. His granddaughter now lives in Kinross shire and has photographs of her grandfather on board Cooya, and another of her grandmother sitting knitting on deck! Cooya then gained some reputation as a racing boat with her next owner, Edmund Gore-Lloyd (1933-1937). During much of the Second World War, Cooya was was laid up in a mud berth in the Hamble river and was cared for by Camper and Nicholsons, who sold her in 1944 to Noel Edward Knee, who provided the third photograph above. He kept her in the mud berth in the River Hamble, but was never able to sail her. However, one day in the early 1980s he recognized Cooya when she was moored in Camaret-sur-Mer in Brittany and came on board.
Edward Tyler later founded the Tyler Boat Company, building the first ever fibreglass production yacht, Glass Slipper, to a Van der Stadt design. Cooya moved back to Salcombe in 1960, where Brigadier Percy Foley, Vice-Commodore of the Island Cruising Club, lived on board. In 1963, Brigadier Foley and his wife cruised Southwest Ireland. The log of this cruise was published in Yachting Monthly, December 1965. He liked Ireland so much that he later moved to live in Baltimore, County Cork, Ireland, where wooden blocks from Cooya were still decorating Dinny Salter's pub in 1979. William & Jane Carr, of Downpatrick, bought her in 1965, moving her to Strangford Loch in Northern Ireland. In 1973, they sold her to Colin Palmer and her present owner, Mike Yendell, who took full ownership in 1976. Together, Colin and Mike undertook a major refit to prepare her for short handed ocean sailing. This refit included lowering and strengthening the coachroof, new keelbolts and floors, rebuilding the accommodation into its present form, electrical work, replacing the deteriorating wooden mast with an alloy mast (ex-British Steel, Chay Blyth's circumnavigation yacht). Since then, Cooya has benefited from numerous improvements (including roller reefing headsail system, self-steering, instrumentation etc.) and continuous maintenance including refastening, substantial strengthening of the floor structure, new chainplates, re-coppering, engine refurbishment, etc, all under the eye of one of the UK's most experienced wooden boat surveyors, Ian Nicolson. More recently, she has undergone a major refit with numerous improvements. Her deck and cockpit have been fully refurbished and waterproofed with epoxy sheathing and she has been re-engined with a modern Perkins 60 HP unit with new gearbox and sterngear. Colin Palmer and Mike Yendell have cruised extensively in Cooya, including Biscay crossings to Spain and Portugal, two East Atlantic circuits via Madeira and the Azores as well as numerous cross channel cruises from the South Coast to Brittany, cruises to and around Ireland, the fabulous waters of the West Coast of Scotland. In 2004, she enjoyed a 3000 mile cruise from Scotland across the North Sea and around the Baltic before returning via the Kiel Canal to winter in the South of England. After wintering in the Exe canal in Devonshire, Cooya sailed South in 2005 towards the Eastern Mediterranean via France, Spain, Portugal, Majorca, Sardinia, Tunisia, Sicily, Greece and Turkey and later in the year sailed from Turkey to Beirut in Lebanon and back, wintering in Antalya. In 2006, she cruised the Mediterranean, Aegean, Marmara and Black Sea coasts of Turkey to Poti in Georgia, then to Yalta and Sevastopol in Ukraine, Bulgaria and South again through the Sea of Marmara and Aegean islands of Greece to winter in Koilada in the Greek Pelopponese. Her current location can be found through this link . Cooya has weathered some nasty, 40 knot plus, gales during these cruises, including a knockdown mid-Atlantic. Each time, her seams remained as they were before, showing the quality of her construction and the excellent condition of her hull after 90 years! Her previous owners were as follows:
The present owner, Mike Yendell, would be delighted to make contact with anyone who knows more of Cooya's history, or who has sailed on her prior to 1973.
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